Spartan update complains
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@sartoric said in Spartan update complains:
eg. Suunto never promised structured workouts, in fact they clearly stated they won’t develop it.
It never promised structured intervals, but it has never confirmed the opposite. There are only hints that to them structured intervals are not that important: (i) there is a thread in this forum that was upvoted by many users and was closed so as not to create expectatives, and (ii) there was a mention in the SuuntoPlus poll that structured intervals could not be created by that feature.
However, Suunto starting from the Spartans is probably the only sports watch company that does not have proper structured training on its watches. Even Ambits had that… So anyone would have expected that the series that superseeded Ambits should at least have similar featureset…
I myself cannot recommend Suunto anymore. About 18 months ago I sent a screenshot of one of my moves in Movescount with some analysis to my fellow runners’ WhatsApp group and they were impressed. I proudly told them this was a feature of Suunto. Today I wouldn’t even dare to send them an analysis in “that fake analysis in a 5”-screen tool" called Suunto App… Interesting how things change in so little time.
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@jsuarez said in Spartan update complains:
It never promised structured intervals, but it has never confirmed the opposite.
Well … this sounds to me as a mostly official “no”
MC is a completely different topic and it’s not closely related to the Spartans … imho
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@sartoric It does sound like that, but technically speaking that is not an official statement by Suunto. If they have it so clear, why not release that statement in one of the periodic updates (by Suunto itself, not by Dimitrios)?
In any case, I had already accepted structured intervals would not make it to my watch. Hence, the change of watch, where structured intervals work wonderfully (powerful and easy to config both in-app and on the web).
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@jsuarez said in Spartan update complains:
It does sound like that, but technically speaking that is not an official statement by Suunto. If they have it so clear, why not release that statement in one of the periodic updates (by Suunto itself, not by Dimitrios)?
Because you do not use a negative in corporate communication (about your own products) unless it is absolutely unavoidable? Hence “Suunto 9” and “Suunto 9 Baro”. Not “Suunto 9 Baro-less” and “Suunto 9”.
If they did not specify a feature as enabled/intended in their official material (even if deprecated from an earlier product), relevant anticipation/disappointment is, alas, on us.
Hope doesn’t die easily so every FW update and app revision might seem like an extra slap in the face but it ain’t: it’s actually simple consistency by Suunto. I suspect the Ruptured Winterval Y/N issue is distant history for the hardware folk. DK is just unlucky to be holding the lightning-rod of SA.
Of course, the S-series could be a stalking horse, sales- and tech-wise, for the next generation. There will be shared FW until the one that gives the Tx ruptured wintervals … but not the Sx.
Sorry: that last bit was clearly ludicrous.
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@sartoric said in Spartan update complains:
eg. Suunto never promised structured workouts, in fact they clearly stated they won’t develop it.
Well, at least they said something about training plans which I somewhat can’t find anywhere in the watch or SA:
“We also need to delay the scheduled October 26th [2016] update (Sport mode customization, training plans to your watch and more) to later this year” -
@kriskus said in Spartan update complains:
@sartoric said in Spartan update complains:
eg. Suunto never promised structured workouts, in fact they clearly stated they won’t develop it.
Well, at least they said something about training plans which I somewhat can’t find anywhere in the watch or SA:
“We also need to delay the scheduled October 26th [2016] update (Sport mode customization, training plans to your watch and more) to later this year”This traning plan feature is available in Movescount and the watch since quite some time.
Still this plan has nothing to do with the mentioned structured workouts…
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OK, I was thinking about whether this was it or not. On the other hand, it’s gone now after the update to SA, isn’t it?
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@kriskus for now - yes. For the future - nobody knows
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@jsuarez I think it’s not about if it has been promised or not. If you see that old line has that structured workouts and when the new line is released you would suspect that will have that same as old one some new features. Also, I need to maintain that Suunto Spartan was a premium watch, many people that bought that watch at that time were suppressed that feature is missing. If you are paying for the premium watch you are expecting more/less the same functionalities as a competitor at the same time. Many users of Spartan’s voting on that feature from the beginning because they believe in ‘we are listing our community’… Frustrating is very big in Spartans users, many probably will go into Polar/Garmin solution, and they will start losing clients, that’s my opinion.
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That’s also my view, @Michał-Rudzki, and those were my logical expectations when I bough the watch.
I upvoted both structured training and web frontend threads and since Suunto has not acted for over 2 years towards fulfilling any of those two items I just realised that I had no option other than moving on and change brand. Two years is more than reasonable time to at least give a proper roadmap and featureset to your customers. To me this shows Suunto’s management is inconsistent and I do not see a bright future for the company.
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@jsuarez (& @Michał-Rudzki) Switching brands makes complete sense when a brand appears to be no longer catering to your Special Interest. In sufficient volume, such actions probably make more impact on a company than forum posts alone. The problem for those wishing the return of their SI is getting the company to link lower sales with a specific deprecated feature.
However, as a Spartan-feature-expansion-hoper myself, relying on those “logical expectations” might lead you into more grief down the road. The “logic” and expectations derived therefrom are based on A) unrealistic (i.e., demonstrably incorrect) assumptions and B) solipsism.
A) New models (no matter how premium) and software revisions do not necessarily keep all the features of the old. Stuff gets deprecated: I am sure you can think of many non-Suunto examples easily. Equally, brands often maintain distinction (especially if they hover at different price points) by focussing on different feature sets. Somewhere Suunto probably has a list of software features and the time/labor cost/benefit of the programming involved: their logic (no matter that we cannot see it) is paramount in product development, not our expectations.
B) That deprecated stuff might be your (or my) favorite stuff.
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Garmin just released the next big update for the FR945, where they bring community requested features and bugfixes. Just after a month since the last release. Coming from suunto, that feels almost impossible.
It’s hard to see that there still is nothing new for the Spartans… -
@BobMiles comparing the 945 to the Spartans is not fair, 945 is the current Forerunner flagship, Spartans are not Suunto flagship anymore. Better example would be the 935 that also just got an update itself, all bugfixes, but still it got something.
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I have a friend that has a Fenix 3 and got updates recently.
Pu me in te list, is I had to change watch soon, it will be a Garmin… -
@Paulo-Silva said in Spartan update complains:
I have a friend that has a Fenix 3 and got updates recently.
Pu me in te list, is I had to change watch soon, it will be a Garmin…Out of curiosity … which kind of upgrades ?
Bug fixing ? New features ? -
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@isazi
there may be updates until 2025 -
@sartoric That’s quality right there.
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@isazi And continuing with that comparison to the 935, the Spartans (at least the ones with built-in HR) DID get a bug fix update just a month and a half ago.